[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 116 (Wednesday, August 1, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5863-S5864]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING AURORA'S LOSS
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, as we gain perspective on the recent
horrific shooting in Aurora, CO, our thoughts and prayers are with the
victims, their families, and on all those who have been impacted by
this tragedy. I, like many Americans, have been uplifted by the many
examples of courage and heroism that have emerged from this dark
moment. A young woman refusing to leave her injured friend, pulling her
out of harm's way. A man giving his life to shield a loved one. A 19-
year-old stepping back into danger to rescue a mother and her two young
daughters. These stories and the others that will almost certainly
emerge as time goes on serve as powerful reminders of the simple
decency that makes our Nation strong.
But as we reflect on these stories, it is also important that we
begin to understand what caused or contributed to this heinous act.
When the alleged shooter burst into the theater, he opened fire on the
audience with an AR-15 assault rifle. The AR-15 is a type of military-
style assault weapon, built for no purpose other than combat. According
to the Congressional Research Service, they were designed in the
aftermath of the Second World War to give soldiers a weapon suited for
the modern battlefield. Such weapons often use high-capacity ammunition
magazines, which allow shooters to continuously fire rounds without
reloading. It has been reported that the alleged shooter used an
oversized drum magazine, which reports have indicated could fire 100
rounds without reloading.
Between 1994 and 2004, a Federal ban prohibited the purchase of
assault weapons. The idea was that if we took lethal weapons with no
sporting purpose off the streets, it would make our society safer and
protect American lives. Our law enforcement community strongly
supported it. And it worked. After the ban was enacted, Brady Campaign
studies observed a 66 percent decrease in the number of assault weapons
that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, ATF, traced back to
a crime scene. When assault weapons were taken off the market, our
Nation became safer. But, unfortunately, Congress allowed the assault
weapons ban to lapse in 2004, and repeated efforts to reinstate it have
been unsuccessful.
So this past May, when the alleged gunman walked into a local gun
shop, he was able to purchase an AR-15 assault rifle. The sale was
completely
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legal. Two months later, he used that same weapon to open fire on a
movie theater, filled with innocent people. The oversized ammunition
magazine allowed him to fire continuously. Thankfully, the weapon
jammed during the attack, and he was forced to switch to one of the
other three firearms he had purchased, legally, in the preceding weeks.
He killed 12 and injured 58. Some were fathers and sons, mothers and
daughters. They were all individuals with plans and dreams. Some were
members of our armed services, who had volunteered to fight for our
country.
Mr. President, as elected officials, our greatest responsibility is
to protect the lives of the American people. A renewal of the Federal
ban on assault weapons would help keep these combat weapons off our
streets and out of our neighborhoods. It would prevent them from
getting into the hands of criminals who can legally buy them today or
who can easily secure a straw purchaser to do so. They aren't used to
hunt; they are too often used to kill. I urge my colleagues to
reinstate the Federal ban on assault weapons and to take up and pass
legislation like S. 32, the Large Capacity Ammunition Feeding Device
Act, which would prohibit the sale of military-style ammunition
cartridges. We can honor the memory of those who lost their lives in
Aurora in many ways--one would be by passing such legislation.
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